Minutes - TRIPS Council - View details of the intervention/statement

H.E. Ambassador Dagfinn Sørli (Norway)
Bolivia, Plurinational State of
7 NON-VIOLATION AND SITUATION COMPLAINTS
91.   Bolivia maintains its position in considering that non-violation and situation complaints do not apply in the context of the TRIPS Agreement. The benefits derived from the Agreement can be adequately protected by applying the text of the Agreement in accordance with the principles of international law and without introducing this legally uncertain notion. Its absence in no way threatens flexibility and TRIPS-related rights and obligations. Likewise, there is no precedent for the application of this type of claim and there are no concrete examples where an otherwise TRIPSconsistent measure would impair or nullify benefits beyond the obligations set out in the Agreement. In this respect we agree with some delegations present in supporting the extension of the moratorium. This delegation stands ready to continue discussions and to find a permanent solution.
The Council took note of the statements made and agreed to revert to this matter at its next meeting.
29. The Chair said the next agenda item was another longstanding issue, i.e. the examination of scope and modalities for non-violation and situation complaints, in line with the initial mandate in Article 64.3 of the TRIPS Agreement, which required recommendations to be submitted to the Ministerial Conference in 1999.
30. The Chair recalled that, on 10 December 2019, the General Council had directed the TRIPS Council to continue its examination of the scope and modalities for non-violation and situation complaints (NVSCs) and to make recommendations to the Twelfth WTO Ministerial Conference (MC12). It was also agreed that, in the meantime, Members would not initiate such complaints under the TRIPS Agreement. The issue had been discussed at each formal meeting of the Council, as well as at informal consultations. He held the most recent informal consultations with a small group of the most active Members on 10 February 2021.
31. He said that, at the formal Council meeting in March, his predecessor had shared her impression that a number of common understandings regarding TRIPS non-violation could in fact be harvested from the past discussions among delegations. In an effort to bring movement into this long-standing and stalled debate, she had reiterated her suggestion for the Council to identify such areas of agreement – either through delegations' suggestions, or through proposals by the Chair on the basis of discussion records – in order to help focus the discussion on areas of disagreement. These suggestions did, however, not attract consensus, and Members reiterated their known positions regarding the applicability of NVSCs in the TRIPS area generally.
32. At consultations he held on this matter on 24 March, Members' appetite for engagement had not changed, and there was no interest in a chair-led process in this regard. Some delegations already anticipated a political linkage of this item with the E-commerce moratorium at the time of MC12. In light of this, he had emphasized that, while he was ready to facilitate process, there would be no outcome without Members' engagement. Against that background, he said, Members were now once again in the familiar situation where a Ministerial Conference was approaching, and delegations' positions remained as polarized as ever.
33. His role as Chair was to recall that the mandate given to the Council is "to examine scope and modalities for such complaints under the TRIPS Agreement, and to make recommendations to the next ministerial conference". He emphasized that MC12 was now only six months away, and there remained only one regular formal TRIPS Council meeting at which the Members could formulate a recommendation as instructed.
34. Against this background, the Chair invited Members to share their views on how to progress the Council's work in this item between now and MC12.
35. The representatives of Brazil; Tanzania on behalf of the African Group; Chile; Bangladesh; Egypt; Australia; Argentina; the Russian Federation; South Africa; the European Union; Nigeria; China; Canada; Indonesia; the Plurinational State of Bolivia; the United States; Sri Lanka; Switzerland; and India took the floor.
36. The Council took note of the statements made and agreed to revert to this matter at its next meeting.
IP/C/M/100, IP/C/M/100/Add.1